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A3PCON
History and Timeline
Before the Beginning
of A3PCON
The history of social services in the Asian American community has
a relatively brief timeframe. Although social services were being
conducted by ethnic churches and other welfare service programs
(such as the Shonien Children's Orphanage, which began in the Japanese
American community in the early 1900's), the concept of an Asian
American federation or umbrellas of services is relatively new.
As an aftermath of the 1965 Watts Riots and as a part of the free-expression
spirit of the 60's, there was an awakening to the need for service
programs in the API community, although back then, API's were still
referred to as "Orientals".
The first Asian American federation was the Council of Oriental
Organizations (COO) which was formed by staff of the County Human
Relations Commission in 1968. COO organized the first gathering
of API's at a conference called "Asians Coming Together I or ACT
I" which took place at UCLA in July of 1968 and formed the basis
to begin seeking funding and programming to serve the API communities.
At that time, there were very few groups serving the API community,
but soon, new groups began to form. SSG had been around since the
1950's, but in the 1970's, many new groups began to form. These
include such agencies as: Chinatown Service Center, PACE, AADAP,
KYCC, and ARS. Others formed early but later faded away. It was
within this environment of new groups forming and coalescing to
form an Asian American federation that A3PCON was born.
APPPCON Timeline
In January 1975, there was a meeting called Pacific Asians Coming
Together (PACT) which was a followup to ACT I. PACT was called to
organize the API communities and a number of committees were formed.
This effort eventually led towards the creation of APPCON.
1976-77 - Asian Pacific Planning Council (APPCON) is born.
After PACT, a number of API CBO staff, and public agency staff (mostly
from the County) began meeting monthly at a information sharing
time called the Asian Lunch Bunch. They discussed service needs
such as the lack of bilingual services at DPSS, and County Probation.
The Lunch Bunch became formalized into the Asian Pacific Planning
Council, or APPCON, which as an acronym didn't really make sense.
1978 - Around this time, Ron Wakabayashi who was then employed
by AADAP is elected the first President of APPCON, and health and
mental health committees are formed. At this time, county programs
such as DPSS, Health, Mental Health, Probation and LAPD could not
service API languages; this became a major initial focus for APPCON,
and very likely, its major accomplishment over the years.
1980 - Royal Morales, Executive Director of the Asian American
Mental Health Training Program is elected the next President of
APPCON. APPCON was instrumental in getting the Asian Unit formed
at DPSS, and helped in the formation of APCTC at County Mental Health.
APPCON is also active in organizing for the 1980 Census, and in
supporting the JA Redress movement which was just beginning.
1981 - APPCON sent a delegation of 5 persons to Sacramento
to meet with legislators to discuss the distribution of the new
"block grant" funding program. APPCON looks into the formation of
a cooperative to save money on office supplies for nonprofits.
1982 - Mark Mayeda, Executive Director of the Asian Rehabilitation
Services is elected President of APPCON. APPCON has grown to a membership
of about 20 agencies and 25 individuals from various public departments.
APPCON becomes a major advocacy voice for the API community, especially
in dealing with the County of Los Angeles.
1984 - Mike Watanabe of AADAP is elected President in April
of 1984. APPCON begins to present testimony before the Board of
Supervisors Budget Hearings, focussing on the on-going needs of
the API community, especially in the area of health services. An
advocacy effort was initiated to get the Department of Mental Health
to provide services to API communities resulting in funding to Coastal
Mental Health, Long Beach Mental Health, and Asian Pacific Family
Center. APPCON pushes the schools of social work to do more API
student recruitment. Work begins on Voter Registration, and ongoing
discussions with United Way to do more in the API community. Bylaws
are now drafted for APPCON and average attendance at monthly meetings
is over 20 persons.
1985 - APPCON organizes a major API Health Issues conference
on May 31st at USC Davidson Center. The Asian Voluntary Action Center
closes operations and the funds (from United Way, ARCO, and the
City of LA Mayor's office) are transferred for APPCON to provide
Technical Assistance services to emerging organizations; this becomes
the Pacific Asian Resouce Coordination (or PARC Committee) of APPCON.
APPCON approves a study group to investigate "designated giving"
by employees to support API organizations. APPCON's budget testimony
before the Board of Supervisor's leads to a motion to investigate
the status of county services to API.
1986 - Irene Chu of Chinatown Service Center is elected President
in April of 1986. Due in part to APPCON pressure, United Way admits
two more API groups to their Member Agency status, for a total of
5 API groups. A winter APPCON retreat was held with 16 people in
attendance; points of discussion were: should APPCOCN incorporate,
can we make political contributions, should we form an Asian United
Way, and should we create a "superagency"? The Mas Fukai Roundtable
(information sharing) met monthly in Gardena at the ACSC with 30
people or more in attendance. The AP Older Adults TF and the API
Child Abuse Council have been formed. The APPCON Executive Committee
takes more of a role in setting agendas.
1987 - APPCON forms the the AP Health Venture and seeks foundation
and County support funds. Meetings draw 20 - 40 people and are held
at the IndoChinese Refugee Service Center on Beverly Blvd. Planning
starts for the 1990 census. API Designated Giving campaign has 8
member agencies to collect United Way donor designations. A statewide
API Health/Mental Health Conference sponsored by APPCON was held
Nov. 1987. An APPCON Legislative Committee is formed to coordinate
City, County and State-wide legislative people. An API Aids Task
Force is formed by APPCON which begins outreach and education efforts.
1988 - Bill Watanabe of the Little Tokyo Service Center is
elected President of APPCON. APPCON committee meetings use the CSC
Annex space (later to become the A3PCON Center). The AP A Community
Research Roundtable is formed by APPCON and UCLA staff and they
plan the first Roundtable held at UCLA in Nov. 1988. APPCON forms
an Outreach Committee to increase other API participation in APPCON.
PARC issues a study of local Foundation support for API groups,
revealing that less than .3% of foundations funds went to API agencies.
1989 - APPCON conducts the first API Legislative Day in Sacramento
in February 1989, co-hosted by Senator Roberti's API Affairs staff.
API Task Force on the Disabled is formed. AP Health Care Venture
is incorporated and obtains county and federal funds. APPCON and
United Way investigate API service needs in the San Fernando Valley.
A new APPCON committee, Service Network for AP Youth (SNAPY) is
formed. APPCON issues its first Newsletter, including Committee
Updates, Organizational Announcements, and News in Brief. A Drug
& Alcohol Task Force is formed (and later becomes the Drug, Alcohol
& Tobacco (DAT) Committee).
1990 - Bong Hwan Kim of the Korean Youth Center is elected
President of APPCON. The Asian Pacific Community Fund is incorporated.
A Housing, Employment, Economic Development Committee is formed.
A planning retreat firms up membership and structure issues for
APPCON. APPCON participates in an expanded and more state-wide Sacramento
Legislative Day, joining over 50 community based organizations from
seven counties to
advocate for government services to the exploding API population.
A Reapportionment Committee is formed. APPCON meets Mayor Bradley
to discuss Korean/Black tensions and forms a working committee.
1991 - APPCON hosts the First Annual Job Fair at the Korean
Television Enterprise Building; over 150 job applicants attended,
and 26 employers were present. APPCON forms an Ethnic Relations
Committee to address issues of race relations, with a focus on the
deteriorating relations between Blacks and Koreans. APPCON takes
over the CSC Annex (CSC was asked to vacate to make way for a proposed
hotel development), with AADAP as manager and HCV as the major tenant,
along with other groups.
1992 - Deborah Ching of Chinatown Service Center is elected
President in April 1992. APPCON hosts planning and funding workshop
for APPCON members, attended by over 90 participants, many from
Pacific Islander communities. APPCON hosts a candidates forum for
the 2nd Supervisorial District and forms a Transportation Committee.
APPCON tries to address the challenges brought about by the 1992
Civil Unrest, the most devastating riots in our time.
APPCON and its member agencies respond in force to assist victims
of Los Angeles' civil unrest. With individuals and businesses attacked
in Koreatown, South Central, Long Beach and other parts of LA, all
communities were hard hit, including Korean Americans, Cambodian
Americans, Filipino Americans and Chinese Americans. A new organization,
called Asian Pacific Americans for a New L.A. (APANLA) was formed
in July 1992 under the direction of APPCON and the Asian Pacific
American Legal Center to address victim relief, build links between
major ethnic groups, and address policies for business development,
law enforcement, and education.
1993 - APPCON holds historic Mayoral Forum as competition
heats up between
Mike Woo and Richard Riordan to fill the seat long held by Tom Bradley.
Over 300 attended to hear the mayoral and city council candidates.
APPCON' Liquor Store Task Force helps shape policies regarding rebuilding
of liquor stores in riot-damaged areas. APPCON assists in the formation
of API's California Action Network (APISCAN).
1994 - Nancy Au of the Western Region Asian American Project
becomes President of APPCON. Leadership Education for Asian Pacifics
and APPCON sponsor study "Beyond Asian American Poverty," exploding
the Model Minority Myth. APPCON participates in First Annual APIsCAN
Legislative Day in Sacramento, joining APA groups from around the
state to educate legislators and policy makers about the APA community.
APPCON member agencies mobilize to oppose Proposition 187, which
would strip undocumented immigrants of access to government services.
1995 - APPCON / APANLA awarded $250,000 from HUD for training
and technical assistance to help API groups address housing and
economic development projects. 17th Annual LA APA Heritage Month
honors APPCON with its Community Organization Award. APPCON's new
Telecommunications Committee provides up to $1000 for APPCON member
agencies to assist in setting up e-mail on their computers, and
free e-mail addresses for one year to 22 groups. APPCON assists
Thai garment workers freed from enslaved work conditions in El Monte
by rallying with donations and assistance. APPCON grows to 50 member
organizations, and Nancy chairs a series of meetings regarding APPCON's
need to re-structure and formulate guiding principles. A new set
of Bylaws are drafted.
1996 - Sam Demonteverde of the Older Adults TF is elected
Chairman of A3PCON and for the first time, APPCON has a paid Executive
Director in the person of Warren Furutani. After a planning retreat
in Big Bear, APPCON evolves into "A3PCON," the Asian Pacific Policy
and Planning Council. The new structure will allow A3PCON to not
only continue planning and coordinating the member agencies in their
provision of services, but also maximize the collective ability
to develop and educate on policy positions. A3PCON organizes historic
September 1996 Rally on steps of LA City Hall to have a physical
show of the API community's force. APPCON also rallies to oppose
Proposition 209, which would abolish affirmative action. A3PCON
also supports efforts to register voters and get out the vote in
November 1996.
1997 - A3PCON makes history by co-sponsoring a legislative
hearing on the Imapct of Welfare Reform. Over 700 attendees packed
the LA County Hall of Administration to listen to API's testify
about the personal impact the welfare cuts would have on their lives
and was covered on the front page of the LA Times. A3PCON holds
an "agenda-setting gathering at Edison offices attended by 200 participants.
1998 - A3PCON forms APIA Vote!, a coalition of organizations
dedicated to registering and educating voters and turning out the
vote. A3PCON organizes Asian and Pacific Islander Community Child
Care Workshop to assist organizations interested in providing child
care services. Building at 300 Cesar Chavez officially named "A3PCON
Center."
1999 - Gladys Lee of Asian Pacific Family Center/Pacific
Clinics is elected the President of A3PCON and Dennis Arguelles
replaces Warren Furutani. A3PCON spearheads community-wide Census
education to mitigate the 2.3% undercount of Asians and Pacific
Islanders. A major effort is underway to deal with Welfare Reform
issues, and consolidation plans within the County structure which
impacts services for API's. A3PCON spearheads the Census 2000 outreach
effort for API's in LA County. A3PCON Housing & Economic Dev. Committee
launches an API Small Business assistance program.
2000 - Kazue Shibata of AP Health Care Venture is elected
President, succeeded by Dennis Arguelles in December 2000. APPCON
hosts meetings for the White House API Initiative. A Re-Structuring
Committee re-affirms the policy that A3PCON will not be a direct
service agency but to coordinate and plan/advocate services provided
by others. A3PCON Health Committee hosts trainings on Language Access
issues.
2001 - Ford Kuramoto of the National Asian Pacific American
Families Against Substance Abuse (NAPAFASA) is elected President
of A3PCON. There is a proposal that A3PCON should, at last, incorporate.
The A3PCON Center site is first notified in December that it may
be threatened with eviction by a new El Pueblo development project
slated for the lot where the Center is now located. Following 9/11,
A3PCON engages in anti-hate crime activities.
2002 - A3PCON and APALC jointly release a new report entitled
"Immigrant and Refugee Children Left BehindÉ Asian and Pacific
Islander Families in the Aftermath of Welfare Reform." A3PCON
is incorporated and files for 501 c (3) tax exempt status. A3PCON
releases a voter guide highlighting the APIA need for several propositions.
2003 - A3PCON actively campaigns against Proposition 54,
the information ban that would make it illegal for state and local
agencies, schools, hospitals, and law enforcement, to collect or
analyze data on race, ethnicity, color or national origin. The proposition
fails. A3PCON distributes information on SARS to address devastating
impact SARS has on API-run businesses.
2004 - A3PCON produces a Voter Guide on California Propositions.
The guide is reproduced and sent to hundreds of voters, it is also
translated into Korean by the Korean Resource Center and distributed
to Korean voters. A3PCON also holds a press conference to urge Governor
to protect newly established Commission on API affairs. A3PCON holds
a signature event for member organization addressing fundraising
strategies during state, federal and local budget cuts.
2005 - A3PCON moves offices to the Refugee Service Center.
A3PCON holds a press conference addressing new concerns in Tsunami
Victim Relief and announces local efforts to help victims. The commission
on API affairs is saved. A3PCON hosts "The Future of Los Angeles:
Immigrant Communities Mayoral Forum."
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